Welcome to a learning project about learning by doing. Learning by doing is an approach which has emerged from discussion of a Wikiversity learning model. On this page, we will explore what learning by doing means, how it works - as well as outline ways for you to learn by doing at Wikiversity.

Learning by doing is essentially about getting involved in an activity and, through the process of doing this activity, learning about things like:

how that activity works,

how you find (or feel about) the activity,

what the activity makes you think about, and

what doing this activity enables you to do.

You might also be prompted to think about the general nature of the activity - in other words, the way this activity is done by other people, in different contexts. Put together, this learning can serve to strengthen your own understanding of the activity through gaining practical, first-hand experience of the activity. It can also be a stimulating, motivating way for people to learn - in fact, people can often be having so much fun in taking part in the activity, that they can learn whilst being unaware that they are learning! While this may be desirable for some types of projects, where participation is the key, it may also cause problems in the sense that the learning gained from a specific task is diffuse and unrelated to other aspects of the learner's experience, worldview, and field-of-study. In other words, learning by doing is something that the learner should ideally reflect on during and after the activity to get most out of it - but it can also be an extremely natural way of learning (it is sometimes referred to as "incidental learning"), which can be undertaken - consciously or unconsciously - by anyone at any time.

There is a template that can be used to denote that an activity can be done in the article. This is the activity template. It helps to keep the article organized and should be implemented more in articles. There are many articles which are missing activities and it would be nice if they were added.

Reflection is being able to 'pause', or 'step back' from your ongoing experience (or activity), in order to think about the activity, your part in it, how you did it/are doing it, what it means for you to do this activity, how you felt/feel whilst doing it, and how the activity relates to other experiences you've had or how it relates to what you want to do in the future - short and/or long term. It is about making sense of your experiences in a way that is meaningful and practical to you. There are different ways to reflect on activities - we generally start by thinking, then by writing down our thoughts in some form. The form this takes is entirely up to the individual - it can be in the form of a diary (or blog), a poem, a narrative (story), or an academic essay. On this last possibility, it is usually better to keep reflections as "raw", personal, and honest as possible - something that is often missing in an academic paper - though academic papers often do emerge directly from people's reflective journals. Other forms of reflection can be visual - through painting, photographing, filming - or even other media like gathering together newspaper articles in a personally meaningful way, maybe even singing or dancing! The main thing is that your reflections are meaningful to you, that they are honest and true to your feelings, and that they help you make sense of what you are or have been doing.

Wikipedia is for encyclopedia articles. Wikibooks is for textbook modules. Encyclopedia articles and textbooks are two specific types of learning resources. The original Wikiversity project proposal called for creation of a website where "learn by doing" would mean participating in online courses. This proposed "e-learning model" suggested that Wikiversity online courses would make use of encyclopedia articles, textbooks and other types of learning resources. Many people who were interested in the Wikiversity project imagined that Wikiversity would become an accredited educational institution.

Conventional courses rely on certified teachers who give grades to students for their course work. Students in conventional courses earn academic credit for passed courses within degree programs that confer degrees based on completed courses. However, Wikiversity is a wiki, a place for collaborative creation of webpages. Wikiversity has no means to certify teachers or become an accredited institution that can confer degrees. In November 2005 the Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees rejected the first Wikiversity project proposal and instructed the Wikiversity community to modify the proposal to "exclude online-courses". The Board requested that the Wikiversity community "clarify [the] concept of e-learning" that will guide Wikiversity.

There are many ways to "learn by doing" besides participating in conventional courses. The approved Wikiversity project proposal included an e-learning model based on the general idea of "learning projects". Wikiversity learning projects provide activities that allow Wikiversity participants to learn by doing.

"..... the idea here is to also host learning communities, so people who are actually trying to learn, actually have a place to come and interact and help each other figure out how to learn things. We're also going to be hosting and fostering research into how these kinds of things can be used more effectively."
(source)

The Learning Projects Portal provides user-friendly access to Wikiversity learning projects. The Wikiversity community needs to catalog the many types of learning projects and develop resources that promote their development and effective use as learning resources.